Showing posts with label business. Show all posts
Showing posts with label business. Show all posts

Wednesday, 28 November 2018

Asian markets see modest gains as US takes a break

HONG KONG: Asian equities chalked up modest gains Thursday in light trading ahead of the US Thanksgiving holiday, following a rebound in energy and tech stocks on Wall Street.


But analysts cautioned the tepid uplift in New York Wednesday should not be interpreted as a sign of the start of a recovery from the recent carnage on global stock markets.

Investor sentiment remains fragile following the volatility that has swept markets since October, while the OECD has warned that the world economy has peaked and faces a slowdown as it confronts the Trump administration´s trade war and tighter monetary conditions.

The dollar slipped against the euro, the pound and the yen amid reports the Federal Reserve may pause future interest-rate hikes.

Crude prices resumed their downward trajectory Thursday, after a brief recovery on Wednesday.

The commodity has fallen by almost 30 per cent from four-year highs touched at the start of October. Oil analysts attribute the pullback to high supply as well as a weakening global growth outlook.

"This half-hearted recovery effort should not be confused with anything other than pre-holiday scramble doing little more than what amounted to chasing oil prices," said Stephen Innes, head of Asia-Pacific trade at OANDA.

"Markets have been remarkably muted, even by holiday standards."

He added the post-Thanksgiving Black Friday shopping spree would be "the ultimate litmus test of US consumer confidence heading into the holiday season".

Ahead of a Friday holiday in Japan, the Nikkei rose 0.65 per cent as investors took heart from the weakening yen.

However, fresh data suggested the world´s third-largest economy is continuing to struggle in its years-long battle with deflation.

Bitter row

Inflation in Japan stood at one per cent in October, unchanged from the previous month, according to government data.

Japan has battled deflation for many years and the central bank´s ultra-loose monetary policy appears to have had limited impact.

Late last month, the Bank of Japan again revised down inflation forecasts, in the latest sign it had failed to make headway towards its two-per cent target despite years of massive monetary easing.

Shares in Nissan rose 0.77 per cent ahead of its board meeting that will propose the sacking of disgraced chairman Carlos Ghosn, after his spectacular arrest for financial misconduct sent shockwaves through the car industry and the business world.

The scandal has sparked questions over whether the alliance of Nissan, Renault and Mitsubishi Motors can survive without Ghosn, seen as the glue holding together his fractious creation, which globally employs around 450,000 people.

Elsewhere, Hong Kong ended the day with modest gains and Shanghai closed slightly down, while Sydney was the standout regional performer, gaining 0.9 per cent. Shares in Singapore were up even as the trade-reliant city-state braces for slower economic growth next year as demand in key markets in Asia weakens.

In early trade in Europe Thursday, London dropped 0.2 per cent while both Paris and Frankfurt slid 0.3 per cent. Bourses had staged a sharp recovery Wednesday even as the EU, as expected, officially rejected Italy´s big-spending budget, clearing the path for unprecedented sanctions and deepening a bitter row with Rome´s populist government.

However, reports said Italy´s government may be open to budget revisions as the European Union took a first step toward imposing fines on the country.

Oil plunges nearly eight per cent despite talk of output cut

BOSTON: Oil prices slumped up to nearly 8 per cent to the lowest in more than a year on Friday, posting the seventh consecutive weekly loss, amid intensifying fears of a supply glut even as major producers consider cutting output.


Oil supply, led by US producers, is growing faster than demand and to prevent a build-up of unused fuel such as the one that emerged in 2015, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries is expected to start trimming output after a meeting on December 6.

But this has done little so far to prop up prices, which have dropped more than 20 per cent so far in November, in a seven-week streak of losses. Prices were on course for their biggest one-month decline since late 2014.

A trade war between the world’s two biggest economies and oil consumers, the United States and China, has weighed upon the market.

“The market is pricing in an economic slowdown - they are anticipating that the Chinese trade talks are not going to go well,” said Phil Flynn, an analyst at Price Futures Group in Chicago, referring to expected talks next week between US President Donald Trump and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping at the G20 summit in Buenos Aires.

“The market doesn’t believe that OPEC is going to be able to act swiftly enough to offset the coming slowdown in demand,” Flynn said.

Brent crude futures settled down $3.80 a barrel, or 6.1 per cent at $58.80. During the session, the benchmark dropped to $58.41, the lowest since October 2017.

US West Texas Intermediate crude lost $4.21, or 7.7 per cent, to trade at $50.42, also the weakest since October 2017. In post-settlement trade, the contract continued to fall.

For the week, Brent fell 11.3 per cent and WTI posted a 10.8 per cent decline, the largest one-week drop since January 2016.

Market fears over weak demand intensified after China reported its lowest gasoline exports in more than a year amid a glut of the fuel in Asia and globally.

Stockpiles of gasoline have surged across Asia, with inventories in Singapore, the regional refining hub, rising to a three-month high while Japanese stockpiles also climbed last week. Inventories in the United States are about seven per cent higher than a year ago.

Crude production has soared as well this year. The International Energy Agency expects non-OPEC output alone to rise by 2.3 million barrels per day (bpd) this year while demand next year was expected to grow 1.3 million bpd.

Adjusting to lower demand, top crude exporter Saudi Arabia said on Thursday that it may reduce supply as it pushes OPEC to agree to a joint output cut of 1.4 million bpd.

However, Trump has made it clear that he does not want oil prices to rise and many analysts think Saudi Arabia is coming under US pressure to resist calls from other OPEC members for lower crude output.

If OPEC decides to cut production at its meeting next month, oil prices could recover, analysts say.

“We expect that OPEC will manage the market in 2019 and assess the probability of an agreement to reduce production at around 2-in-3. In that scenario, Brent prices likely recover back into the $70s,” Morgan Stanley commodities strategists Martijn Rats and Amy Sergeant wrote in a note to clients.

If OPEC does not trim production, prices could head much lower, potentially depreciating toward $50 a barrel, argues Lukman Otunuga, Research Analyst at FXTM.

Volatility spikes to two-year high 
By the middle of November, commodity trading advisory funds tracked by Credit Suisse prime services had dropped 1.5 per cent on the month, owing to the losses in energy futures and the increased volatility.

Mark Connors, global head of portfolio and risk advisory at Credit Suisse, told Reuters this week that the action among macro and CTA funds reflects a risk-aversion trade, as net long positions have dropped from near five-year highs to roughly even exposure between longs and shorts.

Hedge funds and other money managers cut their net long positions in Brent by 32,263 contracts to 182,569 in the week ended November 20, according to data provided by the Intercontinental Exchange on Friday. That’s the lowest net long position since December 2015.

Volatility, a measure of investor demand for options, has spiked to its highest since late 2016, above 60 per cent, as investors have rushed to buy protection against further steep price declines.

The decline in oil prices pulled US energy shares lower. Oil majors Exxon Mobil Corp and Chevron Corp fell more than three per cent and were the leading decliners on the Dow Jones Industrial Average Oilfield service providers Schlumberger NV and Halliburton Co also fell nearly three per cent.